- Sun Oct 30, 2022 9:40 pm
#98063
Thank you Luke for your explanation.
As I studied, hopefully correctly, all must be false (or cannot be true) choices are within the range of the not necessarily true (or could be false) spectrum; however, not other way around. And so I was digging deeper to prove whether E is simply not necessarily true or cannot be true.
However, I think I am not using my study-time efficiently; I am overthinking some , or a lot, of these answers. I took the recommendation "understand exactly why the wrong answer is wrong" a to an unnecessarily overly labored level, I feel.
This example is an illustration of this; even though the E is ruled out on the basis of it being not necessarily true because the question asks for what must be true, I was still trying to determine even after ruling it out whether it is more specifically a "cannot be true" answer which falls within the "not necessarily true" range.
I think I am wrong to think that if I dig further and deeper beyond a certain point into every answer and why specifically it is ruled out, I might get faster by gaining insight into the mind of the LSAT writers. It taking too much time, and I think this time is better spent doing more questions. (Truth be told, I am enjoying the LSAT very much, and a little more than I should at this point in time; my test is in less than two weeks, this coming November.)
So, instead of ruminating over every answer-choice, I am going to spend that time on doing more RC passages!
Writing my thought process is somewhat a torturous process; but it is highly rewarding, at least for me; it has helped me enormously (A very large number of posts, I ended up deleting before posting because as I was writing and thinking through them , I ended figuring out what was wrong with my analysis, and so I ended up never posting them).
Thank You PowerScore for giving us this opportunity to post.
You are greatly appreciated!
Mazen